US performers seek safety and risk at the Edinburgh Fringe
(Reuters) -Eddie Jen, a drag queen from San Francisco, wants to show that "America still fights for kindness", while Abby Govindan, a U.S. stand-up comic of Indian heritage, aims to convince audiences Texas is not what they think.
The performers are among those who make the number of U.S. acts at this year's Edinburgh Fringe the highest in at least a decade.
The Edinburgh International Festival, held every August, was established in the aftermath of World War Two with the goal of using culture to heal divisions.
It immediately spawned an unofficial Fringe that became bigger than the original festival, attracting thousands of more maverick performers in venues across the city.
This year's Fringe includes productions from Armenia to Zimbabwe, organisers say.
The percentage of U.S. acts is 12.1%, compared with 11.1% last year and 6.1% in 2014. No earlier data is available.
British acts have decreased to 69.8% of the total, from 71.2% in 2024, and 81.5% in 2014. Performers have said high costs, especially for accommodation, are a deterrent.
For U.S. artists, that can matter less. Their numbers had already risen as producers chose Edinburgh to test the appeal of musicals as a cheaper alternative to Broadway.
U.S. President Donald Trump, who changed laws on diversity after he returned to office in January, making many artists anxious about freedom of expression, is a factor.
Govindan said she would have brought her show "How to Embarrass Your Immigrant Parents" to Edinburgh "regardless of politics".
Her aims include doing justice to Texas, which she says is "commonly misrepresented as white and racist". "Houston, my hometown, is the most diverse city in the country," she said.
Jen is also keen to get beyond stereotypes with "Seeking a Pen Pal for the End of the World" that tells the story of an immigrant drag queen exchanging letters with his high school English teacher - a retired, white, Republican woman from Bountiful, Utah.
"When Trump was re-elected in November, I wanted to let the world know that America still fights for kindness," Jen said.
The number of Canadian acts at the Fringe has hovered around 1% for the last decade.
Connor Malbeuf, who has lived in the United States for eight years, says the Fringe is "a safe space" for his show "Sorry: A Canadian's Apology for America".
"There's no better neutral ground to comment on the absurdity, political landscape, and poke the bear without the bear threatening the possibility of deportation," he said.
For Govindan, whose comedy is established in the United States, Edinburgh amounts to healthy risk-taking.
"Being here is really pushing me out of my comfort zone in a way that is undoubtedly going to make me a better performer and comedian," she said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Fast Company
3 minutes ago
- Fast Company
Bed Bath & Beyond rises from the dead — and yes, they'll take your coupons
In the early 2000s, it was hard to pass through any major suburban center and not cross a Bed Bath & Beyond. The home retail stores were ubiquitous back then and so popular that one of the brand's locations featured as a major plot point in the 2006 Adam Sandler comedy Click, which grossed nearly a quarter billion dollars worldwide. But in the nearly two decades since then, Bed Bath & Beyond suffered the same challenges many major retailers have experienced: declining foot traffic, a shift in consumer shopping habits from physical to online stores, and rising costs due to inflation. The once ubiquitous chain ended up going bankrupt in 2023 and subsequently closed all its stores. Now, however, one of those stores is back from the beyond—and it's even accepting old Bed Bath & Beyond coupons. Here's what you need to know. BBB is back from the beyond Shortly after Bed Bath & Beyond filed for bankruptcy in 2023, online shopping giant acquired the former retailer's name and rebranded itself as Bed Bath & Beyond. And now, Overstock's owner, The Brand House Collective, Inc., has announced it will open its first physical Bed Bath & Beyond store again. However, fans of the brick-and-mortar retailer shouldn't get their hopes up for a nationwide revival. As of now, The Brand House Collective has only announced plans to open one Bed Bath & Beyond. One. The company also announced that the store would feature a slight name change. Instead of being known as 'Bed Bath & Beyond,' the new store will be called 'Bed Bath & Beyond Home,' likely to hammer home the point that the store is a home goods outlet. Announcing the new store opening, Amy Sullivan, CEO of The Brand House Collective, said, 'We're proud to reintroduce one of retail's most iconic names with the launch of Bed Bath & Beyond Home, beautifully reimagined for how families gather at home today.' She continued, 'This isn't just a store, it's a fresh start for a brand that means something special to so many families. With Bed Bath & Beyond Home we're delivering on our mission to offer great brands, for any budget, in every room.' Get your (old) coupons ready The Brand House Collective has also chosen to implement a unique marketing gimmick for Bed Bath & Beyond's physical revival: the new store will accept old Bed Bath & Beyond coupons. One of the big draws of former Bed Bath & Beyond stores was that they often offered customer coupons that could lead to significant deals and discounts. For the grand opening of the new store, customers with those old coupons will be able to use them again. 'We encourage guests to bring in their legacy Bed Bath & Beyond coupons which we will gladly honor,' the company said in its press release. It also confirmed the new store will issue new coupons to guests as well. Where and when does the new Bed Bath & Beyond open? The new Bed Bath & Beyond location opens today, Friday, August 8, 2025 in Nashville, Tennessee. As for The Brand House Collective, it's unlikely the opening of the new physical store will do much for its bottom line. The company's stock (Nasdaq: TBHC) is currently trading down 3.1% as of the time of this writing to $1.21 per share.


Geek Tyrant
3 minutes ago
- Geek Tyrant
The Thing Is Jack Kirby's Greatest Self-Portrait — GeekTyrant
Marvel Studios' The Fantastic Four: First Steps is the long-awaited return of Marvel's First Family, and it was a real treat for fans of Jack Kirby. The movie a celebration of the 'King of Comics', and no character represents him better than The Thing. Ben Grimm is Jack Kirby. Fantastic Four #1 hit shelves on August 8, 1961. Co-created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, it kicked off the Marvel Age of Comics with a strange, chaotic, genre-blending punch. It was part space adventure, part monster movie, and part soap opera. But the magic was in the characters. Reed, Sue, Johnny, and Ben weren't masked crusaders, they were a family, a family filled with bickering, messy, and human. Especially Ben Grimm. A cigar-chomping, thick-browed, working-class bruiser with a heart of gold and a chip on his shoulder. And if you know anything about Kirby, he was unmistakable. 'It is generally recognized… that he based The Thing from Fantastic Four on himself, however, more based on his personality,' said Neal Kirby, Jack's son. 'I often describe my father as having the scrappiness of Leo Gorcey in the Dead End Kids , the language of Damon Runyon, and the attitude of Jimmy Cagney. Stick a cigar in The Thing's mouth and you have my father.' Jack himself didn't deny it. 'Everybody I've talked to has compared me to Ben Grimm,' he once said. 'Perhaps I've got his temperament, I've got his stubbornness.' Later, he would say: 'If you'll notice the way the Thing talks and acts, you'll find that the Thing is really Jack Kirby… He has my manners, he has my manner of speech, and he thinks the way I do. He's excitable, and you'll find that he's very, very active among people, and he can muscle his way through a crowd. I find I'm that sort of person.' The parallels go deeper. Jack Kirby, born Jacob Kurtzberg, was a poor Jewish kid from New York's Lower East Side. So was Ben Grimm. Jack ran with the Suffolk Street Gang, Ben with the fictional Yancy Street Gang. Jack saw real combat in World War II. Ben became a war hero. And while Kirby rarely got the spotlight he deserved, Grimm always felt like the odd man out next to Reed's genius and Sue's elegance. Even his full name, Benjamin Jacob Grimm, was a nod to Kirby himself. Ben for Jack's father. Jacob for Jack's birth name. For decades, fans suspected the Thing was Jewish. He fit the golem mold perfectly, a creature formed of clay to protect the people. Before he became all rocky, the Thing looked more like clumpy mud than stone. His girlfriend Alicia Masters was a sculptor. Her father, Puppet Master, used clay to control others. That's no accident. In fact, Kirby once drew the Thing wearing a yarmulke and prayer shawl in a 1976 Hanukkah card. He proudly kept it on his studio wall. When visitors asked, he'd grin and say, 'It's a Jewish Thing.' Even Kirby's religious roots found their way into his stories. In the documentary Masters of Comic Book Art , he explained, 'I went to the Bible. I came up with Galactus. And there I was, in front of this tremendous figure, who I knew very well because I've always felt him… And of course, the Silver Surfer is the fallen angel.' That mythic, biblical energy shaped The Fantastic Four and, eventually, the larger Marvel Universe. But it always came back to Kirby, the man behind the panels. 'Nick Fury is how I wish others saw me,' he once admitted. 'Ben Grimm is probably closer to the way they do see me.' Fantastic Four: First Steps honors that legacy. The movie opens in Earth-828, a nod to Kirby's birthday, August 28. Giganto makes an appearance, pulled straight from the cover of Fantastic Four #1 . Kirby's trademark designs and cosmic scale are everywhere, especially when Galactus enters the scene. 'We wanted to honor that,' said director Matt Shakman. Kevin Feige added, 'There are direct lines from his pencil… into this film.' And in a blink-and-you'll-miss-it moment, Kirby and Lee even cameo. As the Silver Surfer soars over Times Square, two comic creators resembling the legendary duo glance up from their monster comics. It's a subtle tribute. This movie is the most Kirby thing the MCU has ever done. Kirby himself once said: 'If you look at my characters, you'll find me. No matter what kind of character you create or assume, a little of yourself must remain there.' With the Thing, that little bit of Kirby wasn't so little. It was everything.

Wall Street Journal
4 minutes ago
- Wall Street Journal
That Strange NFL-Disney Deal
This week's deal giving the NFL part-ownership of Disney's ESPN reflects the NFL's importance as a prop under the otherwise rapidly sinking traditional television business. But honorable mention should also go to the car-insurance advertisers, Geico and Progressive, which have done more than their bit to keep linear, ad-littered television not only financial ambulatory but entertaining. Geico with its gecko and cavemen, and Progressive with its long-running ensemble featuring Flo and her aproned insurance mavens, are among the best things on television. They also inject much of the cash that keeps the old machine ticking over.